• Shopping Cart
    There are no items in your cart
Please Select Your Option.
It seems you are away from your “home” country. Do you wish to be re-directed to your “home” store? If you choose “YES”, you will see product, taxation, and shipping information relevant to your country. If you select “NO”, the current store's conditions will apply.
We noticed you’re not on the correct regional site. Switch to our AMERICAS site for the best experience.
Dismiss alert

SAE ARP85G

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Air Conditioning Systems for Subsonic Airplanes

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Language(s)

English

Published date

25-09-2019

This SAE Aerospace Recommended Practice (ARP) contains guidelines and recommendations for subsonic airplane air conditioning systems and components, including requirements, design philosophy, testing, and ambient conditions.

DocumentType
Standard
Pages
50
PublisherName
SAE International
Status
Current
Supersedes

This SAE Aerospace Recommended Practice (ARP) contains guidelines and recommendations for subsonic airplane air conditioning systems and components, including requirements, design philosophy, testing, and ambient conditions.The airplane air conditioning system comprises that arrangement of equipment, controls, and indicators that supply and distribute air to the occupied compartments for ventilation, pressurization, and temperature and moisture control. The principal features of the system are:aA supply of outside air with independent control valve(s).bA means for heating.cA means for cooling (air or vapor cycle units and heat exchangers).dA means for removing excess moisture from the air supply.eA ventilation subsystem.fA temperature control subsystem.gA pressure control subsystem.Other system components for treating cabin air, such as filtration and humidification, are included, as are the ancillary functions of equipment cooling and cargo compartment conditioning.The interface with the major associated system, the pneumatic system (Chapter 36 of ATA 100) is at the inlet of the air conditioning shutoff valves. This boundary definition aligns with that in the ATA 100 Specification.

£145.17
Excluding VAT

Access your standards online with a subscription

Features

  • Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.

  • Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.

  • Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.